Nourishment for the Spirit

by Maximus 81 Replies latest jw friends

  • Maximus
    Maximus

    My observation is that persons who 1) heal/adjust the most rapidly from their JW experience and 2) seem to have the most joy in life are those who read, read, read, in pursuit of what I call nourishment for the spirit.

    I've really enjoy the pithy aphorisms you use here, which suggests you've distilled some wisdom from somewhere.

    I'm going to ask your help in this thread. What book or books have you read that have really enlightened or intrigued you? And could you comment on what you gleaned from them? A long list of names and titles is easy; kernels of truth are more rare. Aim for the latter.

    I’m regularly asked to recommend books that provide solid Biblical scholarship, especially in view of our JW disenchantment. I'm going to start with this short list:

    "An Introduction to New Testament Christology," by Raymond Edward Brown. Paulist Press, 1994. In paperback for less than ten dollars. After reading it, persons invariably write me that this introduction to excellence in scholarship was a memorable experience, both Christians and agnostics. Stuff that's there but you never noticed. You won't want to tolerate a lesser level; he raises the bar high.

    Brown's "Introduction to the New Testament," part of the Anchor Bible Reference Library series, is an excellent introduction to the Greek Scriptures. I marveled at his massively detailed works "Birth of the Messiah" and "Death of the Messiah." The depth of his thinking was vastly superior to what I had been exposed to in the top levels of the organization. I met this preeminent scholar just before his death, and I found him to be as humble as he was brilliant. Refreshing.

    For the Old Testament or Hebrew Scriptures I highly recommend "Understanding the Old Testament," by Bernhard W. Anderson and Darr. Make sure you get the new Abridged Fourth Edition; Prentice-Hall, 1998. Lets the text speak for itself but lets the chips fall where they may, with archaeological findings, contributions of sociology, Near East culture, and so on. Lots of exhibits and pictures.

    Lawrence Boadt has written "Reading the Old Testament, an Introduction," Paulist Press, 1984 or later edition. Particularly illuminating about the way Israel’s religious experience was translated into written records.

    A real treat is "The Torah, a Modern Commentary," by W. Gunter Plaut, Union of American Hebrew Congregations, 1981. Lots of insight into origins, thought processes, culture. I think I'll post some material from his preface, which I found to be the best insight into why a non-literal understanding of the Pentateuch is the keystone of Jewish scholarship today.

    Really heavy duty is "Introduction to the Old Testament as Scripture," by Brevard S. Childs, Professor of Old Testament, Yale University, School of Divinity. Fortress Press, 1979 or later editions.

    Now. What has helped you? What have you enjoyed. Book,author. His/her thoughts. Doesn't have to be religious, just upbuilding or enlightening.

    In an attempt to be positive as well as helpful,

    Maximus

  • OrangeBlossom
    OrangeBlossom

    Thank you Maximus for the list. I will save this to refer to later. I love to read and I am always looking for interesting reading materials.

    For purposes of your post, the only two books I have read to date were "Crisis of Conscience" and "In Search of Christian Freedom."

    I know that many posters on this board do not agree with Ray Franz but as someone born and raised a JW, these were real eye-openers for me. Reading them enabled me to take the blinders off and really see things, and I mean everything, in a whole new way.

    As far as I am concerned, they are a "must-read" for anyone having doubts about the organization and plagued with guilt.

    Some may argue that I now have doubts because I read these two books, but the truth of the matter is I had the doubts first, reading the books put them in the right perspective.

  • Maximus
    Maximus

    Having been contemporaneous to what Ray writes about, over many decades, I have the vantage point of personal, up-close experience and information. He's written truthfully at great personal price. Completely factual.

    Jim Penton's "Apocalypse Delayed" was the mental turning point for me. I needed the analytical viewpoint of a trained scholar who put the organization in thoughtful perspective. His predictions have proved to be true. I love this man for what he is and what he stands for.

    M

  • r51785
    r51785

    I recommend two books:
    1. "A Distant Mirror" by Barbara Tuchman. This book shows that man has long thought that his specific time was the "time of the end." It is an eye-opener for anyone whose historical knowledge has come from WT publications. Reading this book was the final straw that broke the camel's back for me as regards 1914 and all that other last days stuff.
    2. "1984" by George Orwell. I read this in my junior year of college in 1984. No way I could go throught that year and not read that book. Having been raised a JW it was hard for me to fully reject the WT. It took years to do and passed through many phases. Oceania proved to be a chilling parallel to life on Planet Watchtower.

  • Maximus
    Maximus

    Tuchman is another of those who just knock my socks off with their perceptive scholarship. Orwell is awesome.

    Had a private post about Herman Hesse's "Siddhartha." Hope the poster will pick up on this on the board.

    Maximus

  • AGuest
    AGuest

    Dearest Maximus... may you have peace!

    I 'examined' 64 books... I think you know the ones... excluding 1 and 2 Chronicles. (Well, they're pretty much just 'chronologies', and besides, I haven't yet been 'directed' to examine them, at least not as extensively as some of the others...).

    Now, it's pretty much the same 10 or 12... when I need a 'second witness'...

    Again, peace to you!

    A slave of Christ,

    SJ

  • r51785
    r51785

    I can't recommend Barbara Tuchman enough! Her scholarship was outstanding but her work was easy for the layman to read. I recently re-read "The Guns of August." They say that the Kennedy brothers had just read this book prior to the Cuban Missle Crisis. Supposedly this was one of the things that influenced their non-sabre-rattling approach to this situation.

  • Maximus
    Maximus

    SJ, I've done the same with the Apocrypha, Gospel of Thomas, and suchlike as well.

    Know where you're coming from, and your sincerity always refreshes me.

    Peace. Not many have examined that wonderful word Shalom, which had even a far richer meaning in Bible times, as I'm sure you know--not just the absence of strife. Please expand about it.

    Max
    Who has served in ghettos and learned many priceless lessons there

  • larc
    larc

    I would recommend "Christian Science" by Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain). One of the world's greatest writers, does to that religion what we do here to the JWs.

  • AGuest
    AGuest

    Dearest Maximus... may you have peace!

    I am not sure I comprehend you correctly when you said, "Please expand about it." I guess is that you wish to know why I use the phrase and wish peace to those I speak to (if you are even asking at all)...

    First off, it is my way of letting the recipient know that I am 'entering' into their 'house'... invited or uninvited... and bring with me 'good intentions' (as the Chinese say). I bear no ill-will and have not come to 'scope out' what I could 'carry off', but instead, to impart some 'good'.

    Second, I offer such peace as a 'blessing'. In the time of my forefathers, the GREATEST gift one could give another was his or her blessing... not necessarily for prosperity, but more for goodwill. It was a means of showing one 'favor', that they were held in great esteem in your eyes.

    Third, it is a subjection of myself to such one, as such one's servant, for although when entering another's house, such one has the responsibility to 'show hospitality' and 'wash MY feet'... I understand my position in the universe... that in truth, I am such one's 'servant'... and have made myself at his/her service.

    Fourth, it is my wish for an absence of strife upon the individual... AND his/her entire household.

    And finally, it is what my Lord has taught me to do toward... and wish for... all... excluding those who would not 'receive' it... in which case I receive it back to myself. Thus, it is a 'sharing'... of myself... my spirit.

    And in that 'light'... I bid YOU peace... and I am...

    YOUR servant, and a slave of Christ, to time indefinite...

    SJ

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